Thursday, December 18, 2008

"Close to Home" Reviewed in ArtSlant

You can read the story here:

http://www.artslant.com/global/articles/picklist#p3388


Grasso-current

Ben Grasso at Kinkead
Kinkead Contemporary
6029 Washington Blvd., Culver City, CA 90232
November 15, 2008 - December 20, 2008

Ben Grasso, like many contemporary painters, takes decay as his subject matter, but unlike those painters (often eager to watch the world burn), Grasso seems to follow the enthusiasm of his brushstrokes and the buoyancy of his color into realms laced with whimsy and imagination. His houses are in shreds and crumbling, you see a white flag of surrender, he dashes off a couple of shacks in the jungle, but Grasso doesn’t believe that these ruins denote the end of things -- flickers of light shimmer and whirls of white burst into the air.

The strongest work in show is American Oblique, 2008, a fascinating mixture of Ed Ruscha’s palindrome paintings, the Hudson River School, and maybe a touch of the Wizard of Oz. A house floats up and out of the canvas, twirled and pulled apart by planes circling around through its wreckage. It is hard to believe that plane wreckage can come across as charming and delightful but this is exactly what Grasso has accomplished. Though this house (maybe a home even) is coming apart, there’s no threat here, not a trace of dread. This is somehow, in spite of itself, a joyful exercise.

-Ed Schad

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Ben Grasso at Kinkead Contemporary


My solo show will be on view through December 20th, 2008.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Missing Paintings Discovered... and Not Returned


About a year ago I shipped two paintings through DHL. At the time i couldn't afford the insurance and decided to take a risk. The paintings went missing for a few months and DHL unapologetically told me there was nothing I could do. Mysteriously, the paintings reappeared on the internet being auctioned off on an ebay rip-off auction site called "bidtopia." the company selling them was called "bargainland." How bargainland obtained my work is unclear. How DHL did not know these were my paintings is also a mystery as my named is clearly printed on the back of the canvases... so any idiot could verify their authorship.

After a few weeks of talking to both DHL and Bargainland, I was finally told the matter was somehow out of both entity's metaphorical hands.

I really like when things go smoothly for corporations. And this was one of those moments that makes me feel warm; I love the idea that something I made can be stolen, sold and resold and that there is nothing I can do about it.

Anybody know a good lawyer?